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Digg, Wikipedia, and the myth of Web 2.0 democracy. - By Chris Wilson - Slate ... - The Diigo Meta page

www.slate.com/2184487 - Cached - Annotated View

Michel Roland's personal annotations on this page

bibliothecaire
Bibliothecaire bookmarked on 2008-02-24 digg web_2.0 wikipedia
  • This is not the wisdom of the crowd. This is the wisdom of the chaperones.

This link has been bookmarked by 32 people . It was first bookmarked on 23 Feb 2008, by Martin Carel.

  • 18 Dec 09
    danielroz
    Daniel Rozmiarek

    The article about the Myth of Web 2.0 that I suggested.

    istc705

  • 29 Sep 09
    techsavvyed
    Ben Rimes

    Observing and comparing the "democratic" practices that constitute major web 2.0 sites.

    web2.0 wikipedia digg democracy

    • The same undemocratic underpinnings of Web 2.0 are on display at Digg.com. Digg is a social-bookmarking hub where people submit stories and rate others' submissions; the most popular links gravitate to the site's front page.
      • Ben Rimes

        Ben Rimes on 2009-09-29

        Interesting that the word "undemocratic" be used for the discription of the Web 2.0 underbelly. While true, the whiz-bang magic of scripts, bots, and other technological "gatekeepers" are constantly altering what flesh and blood individuals have contributed, the programs meant to serve as custodians are themselves written by humans. The tools that we choose to employ do not make the process of web 2.0 any more undemocratic, rather just that much easier to engage and maintain as relevant.

        The term democracy itself is difficult to define narrowly (http://www.democracy-building.info/definition-democracy.html). There is no clear determination of how a democracy should be run, but rather a system of democratic beliefs, values, and fundamental rights. Provided that any system meets the needs of a democratic group's values and freedoms (liberties), then one could argue that it is indeed a full fledged democracy. There is more importance on the groups' rules and processes possessing a quality of fluidity and malleability in order to meet a changing environment.

    • at Digg.com. Digg is a social-bookmarking hub where people submit stories and rate others' submissions; the most popular links gravitate to the site's front page.
    • 1 more annotations...
  • 02 Sep 09
    • The same undemocratic underpinnings of Web 2.0 are on display at Digg.com. Digg is a social-bookmarking hub where people submit stories and rate others' submissions; the most popular links gravitate to the site's front page. The site's founders have never hidden that they use a "secret sauce"—a confidential algorithm that's tweaked regularly—to determine which submissions make it to the front page. Historically, this algorithm appears to have favored the site's most active participants. Last year, the top 100 Diggers submitted 44 percent of the site's top stories. In 2006, they were responsible for 56 percent.
    • Digg and Wikipedia's elite users aren't chosen by a corporate board of directors or by divine right. They're the people who participate the most.
  • 15 Aug 09
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  • 18 Apr 08
    edtechtalk
    edtechtalk

    Are you elite techies trying to secretly control society? (-: ~ Debbie Schinker

    edtech web2.0 20080420 davelink

  • jmaddrell
    Jennifer Maddrell

    Are you elite techies trying to secretly control society? (-: ~ Debbie Schinker

    edtech web2.0 20080420 davelink

  • 27 Mar 08
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  • 04 Mar 08
    • Wikipedia-hater
    • people are catching up to the idea that Wikipedia is a force for good, there are still huge misconceptions about what makes the encyclopedia tick. While Wikipedia does show the creative potential of online communities, it's a mistake to assume the site owes its success to the wisdom of the online crowd.
    • 12 more annotations...
  • 01 Mar 08
    shanta
    Shanta Rohse

    "Digg and Wikipedia would do well to stop pretending they're operated by the many and start thinking of ways to rein in the power of the few."

    slate chris_wilson digg wikipedia helium wisdom_of_crowds linkingthinking networking delicious_import

  • 29 Feb 08
    • It's getting harder to be a Wikipedia-hater. The user-generated and -edited online encyclopedia—which doesn't even require contributors to register—somehow holds its own against the Encyclopedia Britannica in accuracy, a Nature study concluded, and has many times more entries. But even though people are catching up to the idea that Wikipedia is a force for good, there are still huge misconceptions about what makes the encyclopedia tick. While Wikipedia does show the creative potential of online communities, it's a mistake to assume the site owes its success to the wisdom of the online crowd.
  • 28 Feb 08
    pickinjava
    Arabica Robusta

    Social-media sites like Wikipedia and Digg are celebrated as shining examples of Web democracy, places built by millions of Web users who all act as writers, editors, and voters. In reality, a small number of people are running the show.

    web2.0 wikipedia digg blog community culture internet journalism media democracy

  • 27 Feb 08
  • 25 Feb 08
  • vances
    Vance Stevens

    Social-media sites like Wikipedia and Digg are celebrated as shining examples of Web democracy, places built by millions of Web users who all act as writers, editors, and voters. In reality, a small number of people are running the show.

    multiliteracies pp107tesol web2.0 webheads webheadsinaction writingmatrix

  • 24 Feb 08
    • chaperone
    • This is not the wisdom of the crowd. This is the wisdom of the chaperones.
  • 23 Feb 08
    mbauwens
    Michel Bauwens

    This is not the wisdom of the crowd. This is the wisdom of the chaperones.

    Wikipedia Digg P2P-Governance P2P

    • At both Digg and Wikipedia, small groups of users have outsized authority. In the case of Wikipedia, this authority is both organic and institutionalized. A small segment of highly active users author the majority of the site's content; there are also elected site administrators who have the power to protect pages, block the IP addresses of problem users, and otherwise regulate Wikipedia's operations.
    • 1 more annotations...
  • 22 Feb 08